UNANSWERABLE FACTS AND 
FIGURES ON SMALLPOX 
AND VACCINATION 


BY ISAAC LOCKHART PEEBLES, M.D. 

Of the Mississippi Annual Conference 





































ISAAC LOCKHART 












UNANSWERABLE FACTS AND 
FIGURES ON SMALLPOX 
AND VACCINATION 


BY 

ISAAC LOCKHART PEEBLES, M.D. 

Of the Mississippi Annual Conference 


Nashville, Tenn. ; Dallas, Tex. 
Richmond, Va. ; San Francisco, Cal. 
Publishing House of the M. E. Church, South 
Lamar & Barton, Agents 





« 


Copyright, 1923 

BY 

Isaac Lockhart Pebbles 


• f 

NOV \ 5 1923 


©C1A759847 



PREFACE. 

This work was written for the enlighten¬ 
ment of the people on matters which they 
have not had time likely to investigate; and 
if any had sufficient time for a full investiga¬ 
tion of them, they very likely did not have at 
hand the literature essential to a satisfactory 
knowledge of them. I hope that this produc¬ 
tion will not only meet the approval of every 
reader of it, but that its data will be so en¬ 
lightening and convincing as to end one of the 
most diseasing and murderous practices that 
has ever cursed our race. To God Almighty, 
the Holy Father, the Holy Saviour, and the 
Holy Ghost be all the honor, power, glory, 
and praise for the good this pamphlet may 
accomplish. 

So mote it be. 

Isaac Lockhart Peebles, M.D., 

1522 Thirteenth Avenue, 

Meridian, 

Miss. ' 

September, 1923. 

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CONTENTS. 


I. Page. 

Smallpox. 7 

II. 

Inoculation. 8 

III. 

Vaccination. 9 

IV. 

Vaccines for Vaccination. 11 

V. 

The Results of Vaccination. 12 

VI. 

Statistics of Vaccination. 14 

VII. 

General Diagnoses . 28 

VIII. 

Laws That Are Needed . 29 


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UNANSWERABLE FACTS AND FIGURES 
ON SMALLPOX AND VACCINATION. 
I. Smallpox. 

1. Smallpox was not considered any more 
dangerous than measles before people were 
inoculated with smallpox virus, which prac¬ 
tice of inoculation was first begun in England 
in 1721. Before that time smallpox epidemics, 
like' those of measles, were sometimes severe 
and again very mild,, the severity being due 
chiefly to the use of wrong means and medi¬ 
cines, and, too, to no attention to sanitation. 
Patients were kept in heated, unaired rooms, 
with no sunlight, with heavy coverings, no 
changing of bedding, crowded together in 
apartments to forty in number and in beds 
until their skins stuck to one another; they 
were blistered, bled, given hot drinks, cordials, 
alcohol, and were -frequently purged severely. 
Doctors killed many as they once did yellow 
fever patients in our day, and as they now kill 
more people with their remedies for the 
influenza than the disease itself. Smallpox 
and measles were classed together in health 
reports up to 1738. Smallpox is still mild and 
virulent according to conditions, and comes 

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8 Unanswerable Facts and Figures 

and goes at periods as all other epidemics if 
vaccination is left off, but its frequency may 
be expected if vaccination is kept up. 

II. Inoculation. 

2. As a preventive of smallpox, inoculation 
with smallpox virus from smallpox patients 
became popular in different parts of the East 
and was begun in England in August, 1721, 
by the inoculation of six criminals with the 
assurance of the king that, if they submitted 
he would give them freedom. In October, 
1721, Dr. Boylston introduced it in Boston, 
Mass. However, that practice killed so many 
people that it was about to be discontinued 
until Drs. Robert and Daniel Sutton popu¬ 
larized it by adopting Dr. Sydenham’s small¬ 
pox treatment for the treatment of sickened 
inoculated patients, and also by the estab¬ 
lishment of the London Smallpox and Inocula¬ 
tion Hospital, and subsequently it became so 
popular with the doctors that Dr. Monteith 
declared that up to 1777 there was not a 
single medical man in Newcastle that opposed 
it, and that it was to them an established fact 
of medical science despite its causing epidemics 
of smallpox everywhere, and its increasing 
deaths of the people. He also declared that 


On Smallpox and Vaccination. 9 

the general public were opposed to it; and in 
order therefore to stop their opposition to it, 
newspapers published pathetic exhortations 
to the people and preachers preached it as a 
great practice and urged its acceptance. 
However, its practice became so crippling to 
business and so destructive to human life 
that England passed a law in 1840 making its 
practice a crime before it could be ended. 
What an awful judgment such doctors will 
have to face! 


III. Vaccination. 

3. After inoculation was outlawed, talks of 
dairy folks became common concerning a cer¬ 
tain disease from sores on the udders of cows 
that would prevent smallpox. Milkers of cows 
had discovered that those who attended to 
horses with diseased heels called grease, and 
milked cows with chafed udders without wash¬ 
ing their hands, they would give the disease 
to the cows. It subsequently became common 
to introduce virus from cow sores into human 
beings with the belief that it would prevent 
smallpox. That kind of diseasing business 
was called “vaccination and vaccinate” by 
Dr. Dunning, and also the use of virus from 
cow sores due to natural cowpox. See 


10 Unanswerable Facts and Figures 

Jenner's letter to him April 2, 1804. How¬ 
ever, Jenner vaccinated his eighteen-months- 
old son with swinepox November, 1789, and 
because his infant son did not take smallpox 
after he had inoculated him with its virus six 
times, he believed swinepox to be a preventive 
of smallpox; but after all of that, his attention 
seems to have been turned to cowpox vaccina¬ 
tion about 1795, and, according to records, 
his first vaccination with cowpox virus was 
from the hand of Sarah Nelmes on May 14, 
1796. See Dr. Baron's “Life of Jenner," Vol. 
I, pages 136 and 137. Jenner afterwards de¬ 
clared that cowpox of any kind, but that due 
to infection from grease, a disease of the heels 
of horses, was not the right kind, although he 
had been favorably impressed with swinepox 
or hogpox, and believed it to be a preventive of 
smallpox. See his “Life" by Dr. Baron, Vol. 
I, pages 128,129,130, and also his “Inquiry" of 
1798. He finally believed that smallpox and 
true cowpox originated in grease, a disease of 
the heels of horses, and hence declared before 
he died that his believing thus had never 
changed. He believed finally that nothing 
prevented smallpox but virus directly from 
grease, or virus from a cow that had been in¬ 
fected with that disease, and hence he prac- 


On Smallpox and Vaccination. 11 

ticed or vaccinated thus before his deception 
of the English government for rewards in 
1802 and 1807 and after he received them. 
See his “Inquiry” and also his “Life,” by 
Dr. Baron, Vols. I and II, pages 135,147,148, 
249, 250, 311. 

IV. Vaccines for Vaccination. 

4. Jenner at first favored virus of cowpox 
irrespective of its nature, and also that of 
hogpox with which he did his first vaccination 
November, 1789, according to the records; 
but finally he preferred and used and dis¬ 
tributed the virus of grease, a disease of the 
heels of horses, and also that of a pox given 
to cows infected with grease, which virus or 
lymph was used even in America until a stock 
of the Beaugency lymph from a cow of natural 
or spontaneous pox was brought from France 
in 1870, and also that of a case of spontaneous 
or of itself within a cow in Cohasset, Mass., 
in 1881. Jenner’s was used in France largely 
until after the Beaugency strain of April, 
1866, and also in England until after a case of 
spontaneous cowpox in England in 1881. So 
in England, France, America and other 
countries, the virus from spontaneous cowpox, 
and that from calves and heifers infected with 


12 Unanswerable Facts and Figures 

human smallpox became the viruses. And now 
we can, where it is possible to take a long breath, 
exclaim, “Thanks to the Holy Trinity that we 
have endured as well as we have the curse of 
smallpox, humanpox, horsepox, cowpox, dog- 
pox, hogpox, etc., and their various additional 
diseases!” It has been said that we do not 
know where we are with viruses, not even 
that that is claimed to be from heifers and 
calves infected with human smallpox itself, 
for there are now as many as fourteen vaccines. 
The whole thing is a misrepresenting, dodging, 
changing, guessing mess. 

V. The Results of Vaccination. 

5. Jenner declared early of vaccination, after 
he began to vaccinate, that: “Rendering 
through life the persons thus inoculated per¬ 
fectly secure from the infection of the small¬ 
pox.” Rut subsequently after one failure after 
another to prevent smallpox, then he said: 
“Vaccination will protect the constitution 
from subsequent attacks of smallpox as much 
as that disease itself will. I never expected 
that it would do more, and it will not, I be¬ 
lieve, do less. ’ ’ But after continuous hearing of 
so many failures from vaccination, he wrote 
his friend Moore: “What do we know of 


On Smallpox and Vaccination. 13 

vaccination? We know nothing of vaccina¬ 
tion.” And he also wrote: “ Cases of smallpox 
after inoculation are innumerable. Thousands 
might be collected; for every parish in the 
kingdom can give its case.” What a change 
from his declaration in his petition to the 
English government for a reward, that one 
vaccination would prevent smallpox all of 
one's life! After decided failures of vaccina¬ 
tion, then everything was blamed by himself 
and other advocates of vaccination but vacci¬ 
nation itself, and thus it is to-day with the 
rotten thing. The virus was taken from 
the wrong sores, or it was too young or too 
old, or administered at the wrong time or to 
the wrong person. Vaccinators began advo¬ 
cating revaccinations and re-revaccinations, 
two marks or scars, three, four, fifteen, and 
even more scars or marks; even scars or 
marks all over oneself; some began to ad¬ 
vocate different years for revaccinations, 
some every twentieth, some the tenth, 
some the seventh, some the third, some 
every year, some every sixth month, some 
the third month, the ninth day, and others 
just as long as it would take. But, despite all 
such differences, the vaccinated were afflicted 
ever and anon with such diseases as those of 


14 Unanswerable Facts and Figures 

the skin, muscles, joints, brain, heart, lungs, 
blood, and even the whole body, and also 
with the smallpox itself; and not only were 
they thus diseased, but many died. It is thus 
in this wonderful age of boasted advancements. 
The people, seeing from a common sense view, 
that 'vaccination was far worse than a failure, 
and even worse than smallpox itself, began to 
rebel against its practice, and hence its advo¬ 
cates began to scheme for laws to force its 
practice on the people under the guise that it 
was the right thing to do, and hence there 
are such brutal laws sneaked into existence 
without the people’s consent. 

VI. Statistics of Vaccination. 

6. Perhaps no one thing has been dealt with 
as dishonestly as the statistics of vaccination, 
and therefore, in order to magnify the necessity 
and importance of vaccination, its diseases, its 
failures to prevent smallpox, its cause and 
spread of smallpox itself, and even deaths it 
caused, have all been left out of its statistics. 
If one became diseased after being vaccinated, 
his blood was declared to be bad; if he took 
smallpox after vaccination, it was declared 
that he was vaccinated too late or his vaccina¬ 
tion was too old or was not just exactly 


On Smallpox and Vaccination. 15 

right. If he took smallpox after he was 
declared to have been successfully vacci¬ 
nated, then his smallpox was not small¬ 
pox; and if he died from vaccination, almost 
anything and everything else was the cause; 
and hence all such failures, diseases, and 
deaths from vaccination have been left out of 
vaccination statistics. Smallpox epidemics 
have been exaggerated in order to blind the 
people into submission to the practice of 
vaccination. Even right statistics of vaccina¬ 
tion that have been made are dishonestly con¬ 
strued and misapplied. As a sample of dis¬ 
honesty, let us call attention to an article in 
the Journal of the American Medical Associa¬ 
tion, February 3, 1923, in which it was said 
that general vaccination caused a decline in 
smallpox, and to prove it, such English statis¬ 
tics as the following were quoted and so ap¬ 
plied as to make them favorable to vaccina¬ 
tion when, in truth, they are against it. 
They are as follows for England and Wales: 
From 1867 to 1876, 58,614 died of smallpox; 
from 1877 to 1886, 18,026 died; from 1887 to 
1896, 4,892 died; from 1897 to 1906, 4,763 
died; and from 1907 to 1916, 139 died from 
smallpox. That journal began with high 
figures and closed with low figures of death 


16 Unanswerable Facts and Figures 

rates from smallpox, having declared that the 
gradual decline in death from smallpox was 
due to vaccination, when it was not so; and 
if said journal did not know any better, it was 
because it did not want to know the truth, 
and hence dishonesty and a lie it preferred 
to honesty and the truth. That journal 
failed to inform its readers of the fact, that 
from 1867 to 1876 was the period of the most 
rigidly enforced vaccination, and hence there 
were 58,614 deaths from smallpox during that 
time; and that from 1876 forth attention was 
given to sanitation and vaccination began to 
be neglected, and therefore death rates from 
smallpox lessened more and more. Why did 
that journal not publish that from 1854 to 
1863, the time England compelled its people 
to be vaccinated, 33,515 died from smallpox, 
and during a more rigid enforcement of vacci¬ 
nation from 1864 to 1873 the smallpox death 
rate increased to 70,458? That same journal 
in its issue of September 1, 1923, declared: 
“It has taken many years for the knowledge 
of smallpox prevention to be accepted, and 
vaccination is a long way from being universal. 
However, vaccination is prompt in its pro¬ 
tection.” Why did not that journal examine 
the records of Germany, Italy, and Japan, 


On Smallpox and Vaccination. 17 

three of the best vaccinated countries in the 
world, and learn of the failure of vaccination? 
Let us now see the falsity of that unsupported 
assertion. Germany, despite its rigid vaccina¬ 
tions and revaccinations from 1836, had 
3,327 deaths from smallpox from 1901 to 1910; 
Italy had about 28,280 deaths in the same 
number of years; and Japan had 48,000 
deaths of smallpox from 1889 to 1908, and 
also a death rate of 3,397 from 1917 to 1920, 
being vaccinated and re-revaccinated, and 
England with little and no vaccinations with 
only sixty-four deaths from smallpox during 
the same time of that of Japan. Let us now 
see how vaccination prevents smallpox at 
home. The wife of a nephew of Jefferson 
Davis informed me that twelve of their 
family, including some negroes, were vacci¬ 
nated, and one was vaccinated three times, 
and that three of her girls liked to have died 
from vaccination, and after two months two 
took smallpox, and it was not long until all 
twelve were down with it, and the three girls 
who nearly died from vaccination nearly 
died also from smallpox. Three of their girls 
who were not at home and, although not 
vaccinated, returned home and waited on the 
twelve until they were well, and the unvacci- 


18 Unanswerable Facts and Figures 

nated three girls never contracted the small¬ 
pox at all. Dr. R. A. Gunn, of New York, 
surgeon and medical editor, said: “In 1875 I 
personally investigated over seventy cases of 
smallpox in this city that had been reported by 
the Health Board as unvaccinated and found 
sixty-four had been vaccinated, and many of 
them revaccinated.” And hence May 27, 
1894, he said: “I challenged the health 
officials of New York and Brooklyn to pub¬ 
lish a full list of smallpox cases that have been 
reported during the past eight months, with 
addresses, and I will undertake to prove that 
eighty per cent have been vaccinated.” This 
challenge was never accepted. Cleveland, 
Ohio, had forty-eight smallpox cases in 1898, 
and hence rigid vaccination was begun, and 
in 1899 there were 473 cases, in 1900 there 
were 993, and during the first eight months of 
1901 there were 1,230 cases, and the health 
officer therefore, seeing that vaccination was 
increasing smallpox instead of lessening it, 
began a sanitary campaign at a cost of 
$90,000 and was so successful in stopping 
smallpox that the Cleveland Medical Journal 
declared: “The great fact remaining that the 
epidemic of smallpox of two years’ duration 
was in a few weeks brought to a complete 


On Smallpox and Vaccination. 19 

standstill.” Such proofs as the above enable 
one to understand why Italy, an unsanitary 
nation, had 28,280 deaths from smallpox dur¬ 
ing the same time Germany had 3,327 deaths 
and Japan had 48,000, although each nation 
was as rigidly vaccinated as the other, and, 
too, why England, which was as sanitary as- 
Germany and Japan, had only 64 deaths from 
smallpox, having repealed its compulsory 
vaccination laws and hence was poorly vac¬ 
cinated. Isolation and sanitation prevent 
and end epidemics of smallpox, and nothing 
else will. The Health Board of Minnesota 
published abroad that Minnesota had 26,231 
cases of smallpox from 1915 to 1921, and only 
82 deaths, and, too, that 24,791 of those cases 
had not been vaccinated, and also that only 
one of the 82 deaths had been vaccinated; 
but responsible representatives of the Division 
of Preventable Diseases investigated certain 
localities in 1917 and found 92 cases of 
virulent smallpox, and 17 of that number 
died; and, too, that the 17 had been vacci¬ 
nated and also 84 of the 92 had been vacci¬ 
nated, and not an unvaccinated person died. 
That was in Minnesota, and therefore why did 
its Health Board publish the falsehood that 
it did? I shall let the reader decide. Before 


20 Unanswerable Facts and Figures 

our soldiers left for the Philippines they were 
vaccinated, and after that Chief Surgeon 
Lippincott reported that “vaccination and 
revaccinations many times repeated went on 
as systematically as the drills at a well- 
regulated post”; and yet, despite such sys¬ 
tematic and perfect vaccinations, he reported 
to our government that 737 of those soldiers 
took the smallpox and that 261 of that num¬ 
ber died during the time from 1898 to 1902. 
On January 4, 1899, it was reported of our 
soldiers in Cuba: “Smallpox is rapidly spread¬ 
ing among the American soldiers stationed in 
the vicinity of Havana; and, although strenu¬ 
ous efforts (vaccinations) are being made to 
check its progress, there are already seventeen 
cases.” Why did our soldiers take smallpox 
and many of them die? It was because their 
blood was kept poisoned with vaccines and 
of their unsanitary surroundings. That was 
just the reason why our soldiers, who were the 
healthiest, the most capable of enduring of 
our nation, contracted typhoid fever and 
other diseases in the Argonne offensive during 
the World War. "When in their sanitary, 
comfortable camps, with suitable food and 
clothing and pure water, they could resist 
their heavy charges of vaccines, serums, small- 


On Smallpox and Vaccination. 21 

pox, and all other diseases; but when out of 
their camps and still loaded with vaccines 
and serums and their surroundings unsanitary, 
those with depleted resisting forces became 
vulnerable to smallpox, typhoid fever, and 
other disteases. An epidemic of smallpox in 
Denver, Colo., was reported as consisting of 
2,537 cases and 263 deaths, but care was taken 
not to report that vaccinated and revaccinated 
people were in that death list. The Philippine 
Islands came into the possession of the United 
States in October, 1898, and vaccinations 
began in 1903 and were continued every year, 
and hence up to 1920 36,656,325 vaccinations 
had been performed in those islands of from 
eight to ten million people. In 1918, 1919, 
and 1920 there were 163,170 cases of smallpox 
and 71,170 deaths, the largest per cent of 
cases and deaths being in the most rigidly 
vaccinated territory or district. 

No wonder that in and around the very city, 
Chicago, in which the Journal of the American 
Medical Association is published 5,841 of 6,772 
persons interviewed were not patronizing the 
so-called regulars. They have lost confidence 
in them as they have in their Journal which 
falsified again, in its issue of September 29, 
1923, about vaccination and smallpox in differ- 


22 


Unanswerable Facts and Figures 


ent countries by leaving out all the patent 
failures of vaccination and also crediting it with 
what is not true. 

On and on we could proceed with facts and 
figures unfavorable to vaccinationists, but we 
feel satisfied we have already produced enough 
to convince any reasonable lover of the truth, 
that the most diseasing, murderous practice 
that ever cursed the people and disgraced the 
medical profession, owes its beginning and 
continuance, not only to a superstition that is 
not only far below that of those whose dead 
rabbits' feet have kept them from having 
smallpox, or that of those who just know from 
experience that their freedom from smallpox 
is due solely to their good-luck horseshoe, but 
that vaccination also owes its beginning and 
continuance to a false use of right statistics, 
to the making of false statistics, to false 
promises and assertions, to dodges, misrepre¬ 
sentations, and even inexcusable falsehoods. 
In addition to the above reasons why vaccina¬ 
tion continues in this enlightened age, we 
should remember that there has been and there 
is still too much slavery to so-called authorities. 
In medical colleges it is asserted that vaccina¬ 
tion is a preventive of smallpox, and therefore 
the students are most likely to believe their 


On Smallpox and Vaccination. 23 

professor knows; but if a student is a real 
truth seeker and wants to probe just a little 
too much for his profession, he is informed 
that that is just what the authorities declare, 
and if he is not so well pleased with that, then 
such an undue pressure is brought to bear 
upon him as to still him or he will become 
woefully unpopular, and if possible made to 
feel that he is not suitable timber for a doctor. 
Another reason for the continuance of vaccina¬ 
tion is inexcusable ignorance. Vaccinationists 
will not investigate and test matters in order 
to know the truth. They do not leave off 
vaccination and test isolation, proper diet, 
and sanitation alone; neither do they seem to 
consider that it is far cleaner, healthier, surer, 
wiser, cheaper, much more comfortable to 
cultivate confidence in a healthy body’s 
resisting diseases than a diseased or scarred 
one. How much better every way for one to 
believe that he will not take the smallpox 
because he is sound and healthy, than to have 
filth of a sore put into his blood through his 
skin, thereby risking a possibility of permanent 
afflictions and even death for a scar in which 
to believe for his protection from smallpox. 
One with a sound, unscarred body is much more 
likely to escape smallpox than one who has 


24 Unanswerable Facts and Figures 

sickened, weakened, and scarred his body. 
There is nothing better than a sound, un¬ 
scarred, healthy body in this life, except pure 
religion. Nothing equals or excels it but 
pure religion, and therefore how blinded or 
willful one must be to swap his health for a 
disease, or be diseased that he may not be 
diseased. When normal cells are made ab¬ 
normal, one knows not what the final results 
will be. They may be diseases, or death, or 
both. That ignorance is one reason for the 
continuance of vaccination is clear when it is 
remembered that it is unusual for even a 
whole family to take any disease at the same 
time, and yet all of a family who escape 
smallpox therein are declared protected by 
vaccination, if they have been vaccinated, 
although unvaccinated members of smallpox 
families escape too. How deceptive to rush 
into families with smallpox and vaccinate all 
who are well, and if they do not have smallpox 
declare that vaccination protected them, and 
if they take smallpox then declare that small¬ 
pox was already in them, although they did 
not take it until after the ninth day after their 
vaccination, within which time so-called au¬ 
thorities assert vaccination will protect. Here 
in Meridian, Miss., a boy and a girl were sue- 


On Smallpox and Vaccination. 25 

cessfully vaccinated, and on the fourteenth 
day afterwards, each took smallpox, and the 
boy's flesh sloughed and he died. The girl al¬ 
most died also, but finally recovered and is 
frightfully scarred. If vaccinated people are ex¬ 
posed to, or have nursed smallpox cases and did 
not take it, it is declared that vaccination pro¬ 
tected them, and yet many people have been 
exposed to, nursed, and even slept with small¬ 
pox cases and did not take the smallpox, 
although they never were vaccinated. How¬ 
ever, unvaccinated people have been exposed 
to, nursed, and slept with smallpox cases, and 
not only did not take the smallpox, but months 
afterwards they have been vaccinated by 
force and soon afterwards took smallpox, and 
some have died. Many healthy people have 
lost their health after vaccination, some have 
died therefrom, others have taken virulent 
smallpox and died that would have lived 
longer had it not been for vaccination, From 
1905 to 1920 smallpox killed 47 children 
under five years of age in England and Wales, 
and vaccination killed 176; and in 1920, 19 
children were killed by vaccination. See 
Records of England and Wales. England 
and Wales during the time of 97 per cent 
vaccinations had 301 times more deaths from 


26 Unanswerable Facts and Figures 

smallpox than now, with only 38 per cent 
vaccinated. Another reason why vaccination 
is continued is, its advocates have so deceived 
and manipulated lawmakers as to secure such 
latitudes in certain territories as to force it 
on the people by brute force. Vaccination 
laws are not made by the vote of the people, 
but they exist through the schemes, misrep¬ 
resentations, false promises, false guarantees, 
and even lies of certain of vaccination advo¬ 
cates. Another reason why vaccination exists 
is, that it affords an opportunity for the most 
absolute power over the people; it is a fine 
covering for a heartless, diseasing business 
and even brutal murder, and also a fine source 
not only for promoting selfish propaganda, 
but a source for a mighty defense and pro¬ 
tection of the willful with the people's own 
money. According to records east and west, 
there are other diseases besides smallpox— 
such as vaccination itself, scarlet fever, can¬ 
cer, tuberculosis, heart diseases, measles, pneu¬ 
monia, etc.—to be dreaded even beyond that 
of smallpox, which is not so contagious, after 
all, and neither is it as destructive as some 
others. Let us look at figures from England 
and Wales. They are these: From January 1, 
1823, to June 23, 1923, “cases of scarlet fever. 


On Smallpox and Vaccination. 27 

44,533; cases of diphtheria, 21,604; and only 
1,085 cases of smallpox, thereby enabling us 
to see that England and Wales had during 
that time 42,448 more cases of scarlet fever 
than smallpox and 20,519 cases of diphtheria 
more than smallpox, and during the same 
period London and other great cities had 
1,027 deaths from diphtheria, 349 from scarlet 
fever, 2,071 from measles, 5 from vaccination, 
and none from smallpox because of only a 
few vaccinations. In England and Wales 
45,328 died from cancer in 1921, which was an 
increase of 2,328 in one year. 

Let us now see some figures of our own 
country. From June 1,1922, to April 1,1923, 
there were reported 102,042 cases of diphtheria 
in thirty States, and up to January 1, 1923, 
there were 5,584 deaths despite the greater 
use of its serum. See Journal of American 
Medical Association, September 1, 1923, page 
738, and also page 220 of the July 21, 1923, 
issue of the same journal, where it declares 
that there were about 30,000 cases of measles 
reported to the Health Department of Illinois 
during the first six months of 1923 more 
than during the same period last year, and 
also 4,000 more cases of pneumonia despite 
its serum, 2,000 more cases of whooping 


28 Unanswerable Facts and Figures 

cough, and 1,000 more cases of tuberculosis. 
The American Physician published that the 
returns of the Bureau of the Census show 
grounds for concluding that 93,000 people 
died in the United States from cancer in 1921, 
which were 4,000 more than in 1920; and said 
Bureau also announced that there were 52,568 
blind people in the United States and about 
15,000 deaths from diabetes mellitus in the 
registration area in 1922. Deaths from heart 
diseases reported for 1921 were more than 
150,000 and were on the increase. 

VII. General Diagnoses. 

7. During the World War it was declared that 
90 per cent of the doctors could not diagnose 
correctly even some of the common complaints 
or diseases. In the October 8, 1921, issue of 
the Journal of the American Medical Associa¬ 
tion , page 1209, we are informed that the 
best doctors in medical institutions are not 
correct in 72 per cent of their diagnoses of 
diseases, and 77 per cent are not correct in 
private practice. In the medical Summary 
for 1922 it is declared that statistics show that 
the very best physicians and diagnosticians 
are wrong from 35 to 40 per cent in their 
diagnoses in some diseases and over 50 per cent 


On Smallpox and Vaccination. 29 

of other diseases, and that even as high as 
57 per cent they are wrong. It further de¬ 
clares: “These figures have been proved time 
and again at the autopsy.” That is, by 
examinations of the dead that were diagnosed. 
The Journal of the American Medical Associa¬ 
tion, September 15, 1923, states that 19 cases 
of cancers were diagnosed sciatica, spinal syph¬ 
ilis, tabes, brain tumors, meningitis, coxitis, 
arthritis. Anyone should be able now to see the 
folly and even the most abject slavery of any 
people, who would allow any individual or 
class of individuals so ignorant of diseases 
and their cure absolute control of their 
health and ailments, much less any unlimited 
control at all. Doctors should be severed 
from the State wholly, and all health matters 
placed in the hands of experts in sanitation 
and isolation, limited and regulated by suita¬ 
ble laws so they shall be compelled to serve 
the people instead of bossing, airing them¬ 
selves, strutting, driving, diseasing, and mur¬ 
dering the people. God Almighty grant it 
thus, now and forever and ever! So mote it 
be forever and ever. 

VIII. Laws That Are Needed. 

1. Since smallpox vaccine is used for vacci¬ 
nation, which is itself the germ of smallpox. 


30 Unanswerable Facts and Figures. 

there should be laws passed to quarantine 
fourteen days every one vaccinated, for one 
vaccinated has smallpox already in his blood 
and hence is by far more dangerous than an 
unvaccinated person exposed casually or even 
fully exposed to smallpox. 

2. Since it is believed that one may carry 
smallpox in one's clothes, and, too, since 
vaccinated persons can thus spread smallpox 
as the unvaccinated, therefore each class 
should be quarantined at least fourteen days, 
whether they are doctors, nurses, or any 
others. 

3. Laws ought to be passed making forced 
vaccination a crime deserving a large fine and 
imprisonment for a certain length of time; 
and if death results from said compulsory 
vaccination, then hang him or those who 
forced it. Human health and life are too 
precious to allow ignoramuses and heartless 
fools to destroy either. God Almighty grant 
us such laws speedily! So mote it be forever. 

What an awful Hell awaits the butchers and 
murderers of the people! 





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